D Feher is a program architect and customer advocate incubating new technologies to improve access, transparency and value of digital resources. Founder of Neuroinclusion.io, Feher works directly with large firms and mid-career professionals to improve communication outcomes and success measures for neurodivergent workspaces.
Most recently, D designed self-service tools as a Sr Program Manager within Amazon’s Consumer Engagement division. Applying Lean, Six Sigma methods to communications pipelines, Feher cut publication cycle times in half while improving narrative quality. Among their cross-company successes, Feher digitized the division’s incubated launch exception approval process impacting all products and features on Amazon.com. This was the first semi-automated mechanism of its kind that saw far-reaching impact in the successful launch of an internal global parity tool released months later.
Prior to Amazon, Feher led Computer Science education outreach programs for Google Inc. Among other firsts, Feher launched the company's first youth technology experience at Google I/O in 2014, championed the release of multiple open source platforms and pioneered multi-generational, coding camps that connected developer parents, to ed tech start ups, and young coders for live code tweaks and real-time feedback.
Before working with learning communities, Feher managed international security logistics and corporate finance for Dr. Eric Schmidt, Alphabet's former Executive Chairman and CEO from 2006 to 2011. During that time, Feher established the first company-wide mentoring program for administrative staff, and was instrumental in drafting the first executive reimbursement policies approved by its Board of Directors. Before relocating to Silicon Valley, D Feher supported research and scholarly publications for the Center on Social and Economic Dynamics (CSED) at Brookings while they earned a MA in Public Policy from George Washington University in 2006. Feher received a BS in Psychology with an additional major in English from Carnegie Mellon University.